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The Falun Gong in China: A Sociological Perspective* Cheris Shun-ching Chan ABSTRACT This article offers a sociological perspective on the rise of and crackdown on the falun gong in relation to the social, cultural and political context of China. I specify from a sociological perspective that the falun gong is categorically not a sect but a cult-like new religious movement. Its popularity, I suggest, is related to the unresolved secular problems, normative breakdown and ideological vacuum in China in the 1980s and 1990s. Before the crackdown, the falun gong represented a successful new religious movement, from a Euro-American perspective. However, most of its strengths as a movement have become adversarial to its survival in the specific historical and political condition of China. The phenomenal growth and overseas expansion of the falun gong (FLG; also known as the falun dafa) surprised the Chinese leadership. On the other hand, the heavy-handed crackdown launched by the Chinese government on this group startled world-wide observers. This article attempts to understand the rise and fall of the FLG from a sociological perspective. Applying theoretical insights from the sociology of new religious movements (NRM), it explores how the contemporary socio- cultural context of China contributed to the popularity of religious and quasi-religious qigong movements like the FLG and why the Chinese government launched a severe crackdown on this particular group. In the late 1980s there were already many religious and quasi-religious qigong groups in mainland China.1 A sociological analysis of the popular- ity of the FLG will contribute to an understanding of the “qigong fever” phenomenon in China. The FLG was founded by a 47-year-old Chinese man, Li Hongzhi, in Changchun in 1992 and spread rapidly first in north-eastern China and soon across the whole country. The number of FLG practitioners multiplied and reached millions within seven years. Between late 1998 and early 1999, the group reached its peak, with thousands of practice sites (liangong dian) scattered all over public parks in China. In the late 1990s, it expanded globally and had “main stations” (zongzhan) in numerous developed and developing countries. David Ownby notes that anti-qigong voices were heard in China as early as the late 1980s. Criticism was centred on the pseudo-scientific * Thanks to Hoiman Chan, Gary Fine, Wendy Griswold, Bobai Li, Stephen Warner and Dingxin Zhao for useful comments on earlier versions of this article. 1. Sima Nan, an anti-quasi-religious qigong critic in China, said that the FLG was not the largest qigong group. He listed several others such as zhong gong, yuan ji gong and wang gong, all of which were said to be larger than the FLG in terms of its membership, though no proof was given. See “A star turn for China’s cult buster,” The New York Times,22 November 1999. © The China Quarterly, 2004 666 The China Quarterly claims made by the qigong masters.2 Nevertheless, the Chinese authori- ties did not take any serious action against qigong groups before the mid-1990s.3 In fact, the FLG was once recognized by the Chinese authorities as contributing to the improvement of the health of thousands of middle-aged and older citizens.4 To the surprise of FLG practitioners and observers within and outside China, the Chinese government out- lawed the group on 22 July 1999 and rounded up more than 5,000 followers within a week. The mass sit-in held by FLG followers outside the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) leaders’ residence in Zhongnanhai, Beijing, on 25 April 1999 seems to be the incident that was the immediate cause of the suppression. Some scholars suggest that the provocative behaviour of the charismatic leader and his followers led the Chinese authorities to believe that the FLG could threaten social stability and challenge their rule.5 Nevertheless, the collective actions taken by FLG followers were all sit-in petitions in a well-disciplined and rule-observing manner. They can hardly be described as provocative in themselves. Why, then, did the Chinese authorities launch such a heavy-handed crackdown against the group? This article addresses three issues of the FLG. In view of the popular labelling of the group as a sect and a cult, it first delineates its sociolog- ical nature based on the NRM literature. I suggest that the FLG can be understood as a NRM with characteristics comparable to those in Euro- American contexts in the 1950s to 1970s. It is less a sectarian than a cult-like NRM. It emerged as a response to the unresolved secular problems and normative breakdown brought about by the dramatic economic reforms and the ideological vacuum left by the decline of the communist ideology. The popular accounts of the crackdown on the FLG are often one-sided, attributing the problem either to the behaviour of the group or to an internal crisis within the CCP. I argue that neither of these can be a sufficient factor. Instead, it is the interaction among the political implication of Chinese history of NRMs, the social canon of social stability since 1989, the organizational nature and mobilization power of the FLG, the strong ideological commitment of FLG followers and the 2. David Ownby, “ ‘Heterodoxy’ in late socialist China: the Chinese state’s case against Falungong,” paper presented at the East Asian Workshop at University of Chicago, 27 March 2001, pp. 11–12. 3. The regime’s first campaign against some qigong practices came in February 1996 when a qigong organization called Shen Chang Center for Human Body Applied Science and Technology in Suzhou was fined 8 million RMB. The use of qigong for healing was prohibited but there was no severe national crackdown on a particular qigong group before the one on the FLG. See James Tong, “An organizational analysis of the falun gong: structure, communications, financing,” The China Quarterly, No. 171 (September 2002), p. 640. 4. For example, Li Hongzhi was honoured with “The award for advancing boundary science” by the Committee of Specialists of the Oriental Health Expo in China in 1993, according to a FLG website called Minghui Net (Clear Wisdom Net) at www.clearwisdom.ca. See also Zhang Weiqing and Qiao Gong, Li Hongzhi pingchuan: falun gong chuangshiren (Comments on and the Biography of Li Hongzhi: The Founder of Falun Gong) (Hong Kong: Mirror Books, 1999). 5. See, for example, John Wong, “The mystery of Falun Gong: its rise and fall in China,” EAI Background Brief, No. 39 (Singapore: East Asian Institute National University of Singapore, 1999). The Falun Gong in China 667 overseas support of the FLG leader that led to the strong-handed crack- down against the group. Borrowing sociologist Rodney Stark’s “model of success” for NRMs, I find that two of the criteria for success in the American context, namely effective mobilization and internal network, ironically put the FLG at stake in the Chinese historical and political context. Methods and Data This article relies mainly on four sources of information: my year-long ethnographic research on the FLG in Chicago and Hong Kong from June 1999 to July 2000; FLG publications such as books, audio and video tapes, and articles from FLG official and associated websites; Chinese government official propaganda materials such as video tapes, books and the press; and media reports in the United States and Hong Kong. I began my ethnographic study of the FLG in Chicago in June 1999 by being a practitioner.6 I joined different kinds of FLG practices, gatherings and activities in Chicago on a regular basis for six months from August 1999 to January 2000. From February to July 2000, my participation was more focused and selective. I participated less in their regular weekly practices but more in their monthly events and special activities.7 My research in Hong Kong was divided into two periods. The first lasted for three weeks from the middle of July to early August 1999, during which I conducted intensive participant observation and joined FLG activities almost every day.8 I kept in regular contact with some followers in Hong 6. My role as a researcher was made clear to the key informants. The attitude of the followers in Chicago toward my research was open and helpful. They treated me as an ordinary follower, which was what I attempted to maintain as my participant identity. Patricia and Peter Adler have discussed in detail the advantages and drawbacks of various kinds of membership roles in ethnographic research. My role in the FLG lies in between a periphery and an active membership. My moderately active membership role enabled me to experience the subjectivities of the group yet maintain a distance at times for objective analysis. It also allowed me to collect data in a relatively natural environment and get access to some information that cannot be obtained from formal interviews. Nevertheless, the significant drawbacks of an active membership are role conflict and the feeling of betraying the informants. During the second half of my research period, my role was more a periphery one. The periphery role permitted me to maintain a more objective analysis and minimized the role conflict. See Patricia and Peter Adler, Membership Roles in Field Research (CA: Sage Publications, 1987). 7. My selective participation was a deliberate move for two reasons. First, the FLG followers had increasingly identified me as one of them and asked me to help to set up a practice site at my school, Northwestern University. My decreasing participation in the regular practices helped to clarify my role as a researcher, apart from being a FLG practitioner.
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